Here is a link to the article I was reacting to https://jacobin.com/2022/06/karl-marx-labor-theory-of-value-ga-cohen-economics Premium episodes for 2$ a month at patreon.com/livagar All my links at livagar.com
Also available in video form at https://youtu.be/NUPWY_evu30 In a recent video by Contrapoints, she goes over her account of envy and its connection with online politics. In doing so she utilizes Nietzsche (alongside a critique of Nietzsche). How accurate is this account to Nietzsche's work and where does it go wrong? Thank you to We're in Hell, BadEmpanada, and Chelsea Manning for the voice lines! Edited by Lexi Fontaine: https://twitter.com/softgothoutlaw Music by Alex Ballantyne: https://transistorriot.bandcamp.com This was an early release to my patrons at https://pateron.com/livagar Watch me stream on twitch at https://twitch.tv/livagar All of my links athttps:// livagar.com
This episode investigates how a similarity between Hindi and Sanskrit, languages spoken in Northern India, and European languages such as Latin, Greek, and German helps spark an esoteric fascist ideology that would be an essential social and philosophical building block for the Third Reich. This episode was released a week early for patrons for 2$ a month on: https://patreon.com/livagar Music in earlier part of the episode by Jan Janko Močnik: https://janjmocnik.bandcamp.com/album/pagania-i
"Hyperborea" was noted by the Greeks to have been a land beyond the vicious boreal winds of the north, in a sunlit realm of justice with no disease, war, old age, or labour. Where did this mythology come from and why is it still being referenced today? Part 2 will be out early for 2$ a month for Patrons at patreon.com/livagar . Additional bonus content about hyperborea will also be posted there. Music in earlier part of the episode by Jan Janko Močnik: https://janjmocnik.bandcamp.com/album/pagania-i Sources used in this episode: Hyperboreans : myth and history in Celtic-Hellenic contacts, Timothy P. Bridgman. Ethnic Identity in Greek Antiquity, Jonathan M. Hall. Adam, Eve, and Agriculture: The First Scientific Experiment, Harry White. https://vimeo.com/145285143 How to change the course of human history, David Graeber and David Wengrow. Elevating optimal human nutrition to a central goal of plant breeding and production of plant-based foods, David C Sands et al.
Continuing with the Das Kapital reading series! Second half of the episode available for 2$ a month at https://www.patreon.com/posts/52742942/ Reading guides/secondary literature I've used: Harvey's "Companion to Marx's Capital" Stephen Shapiro's "How to Read Marx's Capital" Heinrich "An Introduction to the Three Volumes of Capital Fredric Jameson's "Representing Capital: A Reading of Volume One" All of my links at livagar.com
Continuing with the Das Kapital reading series! Second half of the episode available for 2$ a month at https://www.patreon.com/posts/52506968 Reading guides/secondary literature I've used: Harvey's "Companion to Marx's Capital" Stephen Shapiro's "How to Read Marx's Capital" Heinrich "An Introduction to the Three Volumes of Capital Fredric Jameson's "Representing Capital: A Reading of Volume One" All of my links at livagar.com
Continuing with the Das Kapital reading series! Second half of the episode available for 2$ a month at https://www.patreon.com/posts/52353952 Thank you to Corey, Please! Don't Fire Us, and Sierra for supporting me on Patreon (I forgot to say it in the episode my apologies) Reading guides/secondary literature I've used: Harvey's "Companion to Marx's Capital" Stephen Shapiro's "How to Read Marx's Capital" Heinrich "An Introduction to the Three Volumes of Capital Fredric Jameson's "Representing Capital: A Reading of Volume One" All of my links at livagar.com
Continuing with the Das Kapital reading series! Second half of the episode available for 2$ a month at https://www.patreon.com/posts/explaining-marxs-51932878 Reading guides/secondary literature I've used: Harvey's "Companion to Marx's Capital" Stephen Shapiro's "How to Read Marx's Capital" Heinrich "An Introduction to the Three Volumes of Capital Fredric Jameson's "Representing Capital: A Reading of Volume One" http://la.utexas.edu/users/hcleaver/357k/357ksg.html https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u-ECaJ031Q0 All of my links at livagar.com
Continuing with the Das Kapital reading series! Second half of the episode available for 2$ a month at https://www.patreon.com/livagar Reading guides/secondary literature I've used: Harvey's "Companion to Marx's Capital" Stephen Shapiro's "How to Read Marx's Capital" Heinrich "An Introduction to the Three Volumes of Capital Fredric Jameson's "Representing Capital: A Reading of Volume One" http://la.utexas.edu/users/hcleaver/357k/357ksg.html All of my links at livagar.com
Continuing with the Das Kapital reading series! Second half of the episode available for 2$ a month at https://www.patreon.com/posts/50860734 Timestamps for the episode: 00:00 – 02:46 Intro 02:46 – 06:06 The conditions for commodity exchange 06:06 – 11:02 The peculiarity of commodity exchange 11:02 – 14:03 Barter 14:03 – 15:51 Money 15:51 – 16:58 Outro Reading guides/secondary literature I've used: Harvey's "Companion to Marx's Capital" Stephen Shapiro's "How to Read Marx's Capital" Heinrich (my favourite of them) "An Introduction to the Three Volumes of Capital Fredric Jameson's "Representing Capital: A Reading of Volume One" http://la.utexas.edu/users/hcleaver/357k/357ksg.html All of my links at livagar.com